The Level Up Podcast w/ Paul Alex - Matt Lopez On Violence In America The Charlotte Train Murder And Escaping The Badge Through Crypto

Episode Date: January 11, 2026

In this powerful episode of The Level Up Podcast, Paul Alex sits down with former law enforcement officer Matt Lopez to dive into America’s escalating violence, the tragic Charlotte Train Murder inv...olving a Ukrainian refugee, and how his own painful experiences in policing led him to build a new path through entrepreneurship and crypto. Matt opens up about the challenges of serving in law enforcement, the toll it took on his health and family, and the betrayal he felt from the very system he dedicated his life to. He shares how those struggles fueled his transition into the crypto space, where he rebuilt his life, created financial independence, and began mentoring others on the same journey. From hard conversations on systemic failures to insights on resilience, leadership, and wealth creation, this episode highlights why taking ownership of your future is more important than ever. 📲 Connect with Matt on Instagram: @precisionmatt Your Network is your NETWORTH! Make sure to add me on all SOCIAL MEDIA PLATFORMS: Instagram: https://jo.my/paulalex2024 Facebook: https://jo.my/fbpaulalex2024 YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCGhDAD1JyGGzSQUPD9lc9HQ LinkedIn: https://jo.my/inpaulalex2024 Looking for a secondary source of income or want to become an entrepreneur? Check out one of my companies below to see if we can help you: www.CashSwipe.com FREE Copy of my book “Blue to Digital Gold - The New American Dream”www.officialPaulAlex.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:27 Visit medcan.com slash moments to get started. You're guilty from the beginning in police work. 100%. You're guilty of it, and then you have to prove your innocence. I've been hurt multiple times, blew my neck, blew my back. I was in so much pain, and I just got fucking, right? Out with the trash. My primary FTO, it happened to him.
Starting point is 00:00:45 Went out to breakfast. He's like, do not trust these fissors, the departments. The first year was rough, just trying to find myself. I had a buddy who kept talking me about Bitcoin. The biggest thing was that you couldn't confiscate it, and it was sovereign. I was like, well, I don't trust banks. I don't trust governments now. So I started diving into crypto.
Starting point is 00:01:01 I put like 40 grand in. And within like six weeks, it was 250K. What's your wife saying? She said, wow, that's good, honey. Hey, guys, and welcome back to the level of podcast. This is Paul Alex. And today we have a phenomenal interview. Okay.
Starting point is 00:01:27 We're going to be interviewing Matt Lopez. He's a former police officer, not only based in the Bay Area, but in Oakland and San Francisco. He's been in multiple, multiple critical incidents. So if you're a cop, he's a cop's cop, and you guys are going to love this interview. Also, for my crypto enthusiasts, guys, he's also been able to do some pretty cool projects. He's been able to go ahead and build millions of dollars in revenue
Starting point is 00:01:50 through his crypto investments, and he's currently teaching beginners exactly how to do that. I'm a beginner, guys, so I've got to learn too, right? And then we're going to be talking about some critical instances that are actually happening right now in the U.S. With that being said, Matt, welcome to the show, brother. Paul, thanks for having me, brother. Yeah, how was that traffic?
Starting point is 00:02:06 It's fun. Three hours. It's good times. Yeah, you're like, keep Miami, dude. Yeah, I feel the same way, guys. You can keep it. Yeah, yeah. Everybody's moving here to Miami. I think it's like the new L.A., basically, or worse, right? With that being said, for the people that don't know you, Matt, who are you exactly? A father, a husband. Former cop, worked in Oakland, San Francisco. Now I do crypto work.
Starting point is 00:02:37 Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. And let's go ahead and go to your humble beginnings. Yeah. Of being the police. Yes. Okay. So when did your police career start?
Starting point is 00:02:49 I joined Oakland in 2007. 2007. So I would say 2007 was like, it was a good time to be a cop. For sure. Right? Yeah. Did you guys have cameras back then? No.
Starting point is 00:02:59 No cameras. No cameras. When did the cameras come into play? Not while I was in Oakland. So I left Oakland, 2010. and we still didn't have them. I went to Hayward, still didn't have them, and I never had them in San Francisco.
Starting point is 00:03:11 I never wore a camera. Okay, okay. Yeah, because you worked undercover? Mm-hmm. Okay. No, but even in San Francisco, I still never wore a body camera, even on patrol. So it was an option?
Starting point is 00:03:21 No, we didn't even have them. Wow. Yeah. Okay. Never wore camera. I call that the golden area of policing guys, because, you know, once the cameras came into play,
Starting point is 00:03:29 you know, police work changed, right? You would get in trouble overseeing the silliest things for doing your job. Yeah, I think there's pros and cons to it. and talking to some of the guys still in it, like guys that were with me, definitely pros and cons, but I think the biggest thing that it does
Starting point is 00:03:41 is the cameras take away just some of the discretion that cops have. Right. Because I'm sure you know, community policing and actually kind of understanding who you're dealing with, if you get somebody with something and you have a camera on,
Starting point is 00:03:55 you have to take action now because it's on camera. So whereas before we kind of had some discretion and you can kind of build rapport with different kinds of people when you didn't have a camera on you. That makes a lot of sense. And, you know, using discretion in police work, I mean, police work is not, you could say, the cleanest type of work. And sometimes you have to get your hands dirty in order to go ahead and get the bigger violent criminals or the bigger fish, like we would like to call it.
Starting point is 00:04:21 Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. So with that being said, paint the picture of how it was the first couple of years working in Oakland, when you were working in Oakland, dude, for somebody who, let's say, wants to be a cop. Yeah. Okay. And for somebody who's just like, all right, I love cop stories. Tell me a good one. Yeah. So Pete Oakland, how was it at that time during your life? Well, I mean, I would even have to go back to the academy. I had a D.T instructor who was amazing. Samuel Falafini, he unfortunately passed away from a stroke. But one of my D.T instructors, and if I don't talk about him, I think it just, he kept cops safe for years, right? You had decades of cops that just probably was safe on the streets for him. And I made the mistake of not listening to what he was telling me to do because another DT instructor told me to do something else. And he pretty much kicked me in the nuts, started screaming at me, telling me that I was going to get him fucking killed if I didn't listen to him. And I realized very quickly, like, where I was at.
Starting point is 00:05:19 Yeah. Oh, man. Like, if someone tells you to do something, you just do it right then and there. Exactly. And I apologized afterwards and said, I made a mistake, even though the main DT instructor came over and said, hey, I told him to do that. And he was like, I don't give a fuck what you told him to do. Like I told him to do that. And I apologized.
Starting point is 00:05:36 And ended up becoming actually really, really good friends with them where we even rode together a few times. And it was just, he's a legend in that department. So going through there, I learned a lot of vital lessons in our academy. We had some great. My RTOs were amazing. And into the FTO program, it was just these are guys that I think you could probably put up against any cop in history or just any other department in the world. What made them so good? they had just seen so much.
Starting point is 00:06:03 They had seen so much, and they had just the take that they took on police work, all of them wanted to help. Like, they all wanted to help. I would say my second phase FTO, he's not active anymore, and I don't know if I want to say his name, but he was a legend of the department. He was an RTO, an FTO driving. He was a guy that basically made me fall in love with the department.
Starting point is 00:06:29 He took me to every place. where an Oakland police officer had been killed and told me the story. And so each place, like he just took me there and told me about it. And I just fell in love, even though, because I wasn't from Oakland. So I think he really made it important because I didn't live there. I wasn't from there. But how do I get tied into one, the department and to the community to make it a better place? So he just did an amazing job of making me just fucking love that place. Like, okay, I felt such a tradition. And he had learned it from somebody else. So like there was generational policing going on. Same thing with my friend.
Starting point is 00:07:01 first phase FTO was on the probation parole team, so our PAC team, which was just a killer team. And that guy, same thing. Like, he taught me lessons that had been learned from, you know, his RTOs and FTOs. And it was just like, the legacy was just hundreds of years of police work that there was being handed down through these guys. And I don't know, they just had so much knowledge and they all want to do a good job. Like it wasn't about just, you know, kick ass, take people to jail, whatever it was. And I remember one actually instance from my primary FTO. We did just a four, five, nine that we came a couple days late to. And just a burglary for those who don't know.
Starting point is 00:07:41 And the kid had gotten his, like penny jar, his little, he had a jar full of money that had gotten stolen. And I remember my FTO, like taking the report, doing all this stuff, apologized to everybody. And then he went and he slipped a hundred bucks under the kid's pillow. And we left and he just said, like, these people have it so hard anyway. ways, like, I can make the difference. And he just did that. And I never forgot that. We used to work overtime quite a bit, like, and not get paid for the first hour. Because he said, we give the first department. Department treats us good. We're going to treat them good. And this is unfortunately a guy that eventually got pushed out by the department. Yeah. But these guys
Starting point is 00:08:18 loved it. They were just amazing. So they basically built that culture, that vision for you. They built the foundation of why you actually liked policing there. Oh, yeah. Yeah. No, I loved it. My first year, I would have done it for free. I would have done the job for free. You know, I always say the same thing. Yeah. You know, the day that I got released from field training, you know, field training, dude, I remember sitting in the Crown Vic driving down 84th and International for everybody,
Starting point is 00:08:44 all my variants, you know, in Brooklyn. But yeah, dude, and just saying how this is a dream. Like, I can't believe I'm getting paid to do this. It was phenomenal. Greatest job in the world. Yeah, greatest job in the world. And there used to be a same by OG cop. He just retired, but he used to say, hey, Paul, man, not bad for having a high school degree.
Starting point is 00:09:07 You know, you probably know who that is. Yeah, yeah, man. Okay, cool. So what happened? Why did you leave Oakland to go to San Francisco? Well, they had the great financial crash. So that happened. Vallejo went bankrupt.
Starting point is 00:09:21 What year was this? This was 2010, I think. Yeah, I think it was 2010. Yeah, 2010. So a great financial crash happened in 2008, and then cities started having problems. They were going to lay off a bunch of cops. They did half of my class. I was thankful enough my first year off probation.
Starting point is 00:09:43 I received an exceeds expectations rating, so I still would have made it right at the border. I think I graduated at my class like 13th, and there was only like 19 of us that made through FTO anyways out of like 51 that started. But I got exceeds expectations, so it bumped me to the top of my class for, seniority and then half my class was laid off. So half my class was laid off. Most of my squadmates were all laid off. And the POA at the time said they're going to do more layoffs. So I said, okay, we have to go. My wife was pregnant with our first kid. We had just bought a house. So I was like, I got to find somewhere else to work just in case because I saw all these other guys struggling that had been laid off. And what were most cops doing? Where were they getting laid off?
Starting point is 00:10:25 Were they going to other departments? Were they like transitioning to other jobs? Some, if you were lucky enough, a lot of them, yeah, were just picking up any kind of side gig they wanted or could. I think some of them were guarding the, a lot of them were guarding the weed places. Wow. The accessories were legal, so a lot of them picked up just, you know, anything they could get to basically pay the bills during that time. Wow. Wow. And then you end up transitioning to San Francisco. You end up going to San Francisco with all this experience from Oakland, man.
Starting point is 00:10:54 I mean, I feel like once you transitioned from being a cop somewhere else, I mean, obviously you've got to learn. and different habits. You've got to go ahead and earn your rep again. Yep. So how is that the transition going from Oakland PD to San Francisco PD at that time? Yeah, well, I did do a quick 10 months in Hayward, which was pretty rough because, you know, Oakland was, it felt very large because we only had two stations. You had e-smaw and you had PAB.
Starting point is 00:11:19 So it was like, the lineups were massive, everything else. And then I went to Hayward, and it was like 110 cops. Very small. Tiny, right? Tiny department. Good old boys club. Yes. And there was guys with 10 years on that had never been in a specialized unit,
Starting point is 00:11:34 and I had already been in one. And it was just like, man, I don't want to wait that long. And it was way different. So I said, I got to get out of here. So that's when I ended up a good friend had went to SF, said this place is great. He worked in L.A. as well, L.A., Oakland, and then SF. And so I was like, cool, I'm out, took the chance. Went over to San Francisco.
Starting point is 00:11:52 They put us through a lateral academy, which was thought was kind of funny because we didn't have to do one in Hayward. So I was like, okay, I'll do one. It was a bunch of us Oakland guys. And I think they were getting a feel for us because they had never had laterals at that time. I'll say the policing in San Francisco is great, but the training is nowhere near the same. Like, night and day difference. How so? Well, like, I don't know.
Starting point is 00:12:13 Did you march in your academy? So we marched. I mean, it really depends on who your RTO is. And for the listeners and the viewers, if you guys don't know our police jargon that we're using, RTO means recruiting training officer. FTO is field training officer. So these are the acronyms that we use for the people that basically train the police at the police academy. But no, one thing I did see because you have to go through post requirements in California.
Starting point is 00:12:40 So it's all this certification. That's why when people talk shit and they go ahead, oh, well, please, you don't need no training for that. Bullshit. It's the most intense training that you could do within six months. And if you fail one test once a week, you're screwed, right? But I know for Oakland, their D-TAC, their defensive tactics, and also their shooting. Their firearms training is like an additional 100 hours compared to most academies. That's what I remember.
Starting point is 00:13:08 Our range qualls were harder than some SWAT calls, qualls for other departments. I knew that. And you know what? I can confirm that. And the reason why is because I went to work under Alameda County sheriffs. And when I did, I remember that they wanted. me to become a field training officer but for detectives at that time. Oakland didn't want to do it because I wasn't on the street for that long.
Starting point is 00:13:32 Okay. So they ended up shipping me out all the way to San Diego to get field training certified. Yep. When I did that, I was supposed to teach the class something from my agency. So I taught them DTAC, defensive tactics. And they're like, that's a SWAT move. I was like, what do you mean? That's a SWAT move.
Starting point is 00:13:48 They're like, yeah, that's only our SWAT guys using that. I was just like, really? I was like, dude, we've been using this all day. Well, that is one of the things that, like you're saying, is that in Oakland, I feel like, no matter where we were at, you could jump on any call in a stack with any team. And we all have the same tactics. Yeah. From the patrolmen all the way up to the SWAT guy, it didn't matter what it was. If an incident was going on, you could show up and you knew what your job was. Yeah. San Francisco was totally fractured. We had our patrol units. You had the motor guys. You had our spec team, which is like, snipers, there are sometimes the first ones on there. And then you had your tack team, which is like they're a, they have their own unit. They don't handle, you know, sometimes
Starting point is 00:14:30 they go out and handle calls, but they're like a full-time team. And everyone had different roles. And it was just, it was a mess. It had control chaos. Yeah, yeah. You couldn't, you didn't, nobody knew what everybody else was doing. No one was trained exactly the same. So I feel like that was a problem. It could have been because they had 2,200 cops. But the good news is, I think a lot of open guys have got into the training department since I left especially. That makes sense. And they're trying to square it away. I know two guys have just an amazing job at their academy to like, because the reality is it's
Starting point is 00:14:59 not about who knows what are. It's about keeping people safe. Yeah, 100%. Keep a cop safe and then also keeping citizens safe because the better trained your cops are, you're less likely to overreact in a situation. Less shootings, less problems. You just know how to handle things. Correct.
Starting point is 00:15:14 And like that's the thing. Like I always remember, you know, Captain Joyner, when he taught, in our academy, he was only a sergeant, but, you know, he had been in five shootings already. And, you know, he's the one who got shot at the gas station multiple times in that one incident after he retired. But he remember him saying, I could have shot a hundred people, but I'm a god-fearing man. And I remember that distinctly in my head. And then I almost had a shooting where I didn't shoot, where I could have shot. And I felt really shitty about it because I was like, from my academy training, I should have shot this guy. Yeah, right. On paper, you were like,
Starting point is 00:15:44 On paper, I was 100% right, but I didn't. And I made a decision. And then my sergeant who ended up getting killed, Dan Sakai, he talked to me after the incident. Because I asked him, I said, Sarge, can I talk to you about this? And I told him what had happened. And he said, don't ever feel bad about not doing something because you had a reason, because that's why we trained you. Right. And so, like, yes, I think the better trained you are, the more apt you are to keep everybody safe yourself and the people that you're protecting. No, absolutely, man. So, San Francisco, how long were you in San Francisco for? Um, I did, uh, seven in San Francisco. So seven years, San Francisco, what was your path like?
Starting point is 00:16:20 Because there's different paths. And when I say paths, guys, in law enforcement, I mean, people have different reasons to become a cop, whether it's financials, whether it's purpose, whether it's like, you just want to get into shit. You know, it's probably one of those. I'm mad too. But that's just what it is, right? So when we ask about path, I know a lot of cops that stay, you know, a beat cop, which is nothing wrong with that for, majority of their career and then they end up becoming a field training officer and then finally a sergeant right yeah and they retire out that's it right but for a lot of guys like yourself yeah
Starting point is 00:16:57 you go into specialized unit you do all the crazy shit so yeah what path did you take uh well for me what ultimately when i got in it um like anything else i had a degree so i thought i was smart and i was like i want to move up the ranks is when i first got in even in oakland this is what changed my whole perspective. And then one of our sergeants, he's an OG in Oakland, came in the academy and literally got up there and said, if you're not here to take people to jail, you're for the wrong fucking reason. And right then and there, that switched my whole mindset of what I thought I should be doing. And I just said I want to do 10 years before I ever promote. And I wanted to say that like I knew the best cops. I had some very good sergeants. I know you did as well.
Starting point is 00:17:38 some of them had done everything. Some of them didn't do everything, but they knew who to ask when they didn't know the answer. And so I was like, man, I just want 10 years as an officer touch as many areas of police work as possible. So that when I promote, when these people look to me for guidance, I know I can either give it to them. And if I can't, if I don't know the answer, I know somebody close to me who does. So I think when I got in San Francisco, I was in a shooting within five weeks. So I was just coming off of shooting like a year before, five weeks in, I'm in FTO and I get in another shooting. they took really good care of me.
Starting point is 00:18:10 Our chief was an absolute stud. Chief Greg Sir, he was the man at the time, came in, took phenomenal care of me, sent me to Northern Station, Northern Station, the Legacy Station, cops who have been coping their third generation, great-great-grandfathers had worked in the 1906 earthquake, just a legacy station.
Starting point is 00:18:29 Did really good job there. I was able to start doing like Street Team, which we didn't really have in Oakland. So we have each station in San Francisco has its undercover teams. So we have our plainclothes teams that work out of the station that handle everything within the neighborhoods. So I wanted to work some plainclothes. So I wasn't on our plainclothes team there, but I got to be plainclothes at nighttime because the plan close guys work swings usually. So at nighttime, they'll let my partner I go be playing
Starting point is 00:18:55 close. So I did that for a long time. And then our southern playing close team had gotten in some trouble a couple years past before my time there. And they wanted to bring it back. Southern was a major station. It's basically the Hall of Justice. It's where like all the dirty hairy movies and everything are out of. And they said it's important for us to have this playing close team back. We want to start it again and we want you to be a part of it. So it was actually me and a couple other Oakland guys and then some SF guys and we brought that team back. So I did that. Started there. And then we were basically since San Francisco is kind of an open air drug market. Anybody that can't sell dope in their own cities because it's too violent,
Starting point is 00:19:35 Oakland streets are super violent. If you couldn't cut it on the corners, you would just go selling the tender oil. You would just go selling San Francisco because it was open, not as violent. We were having problems with people coming from all of our other cities and causing chaos in the city. So Chief Sir said,
Starting point is 00:19:50 we need a unit to go handle these guys. Right. And that was you guys. Yeah, he said, you're a shitstorm. So anywhere these guys live outside of this city, we want you guys to go get them. So it was me, a couple other Oakland guys, and then some OGs in San Francisco
Starting point is 00:20:06 who were probably some of the best undercover cops we've ever had that I got to work with. I put them on par with Oakland cops as far as like CIs go. The way they can manage the CIs. Tactics and police work maybe a little different. I always say that Oakland guys are the best. But yeah, that was my path in San Francisco.
Starting point is 00:20:24 I love that. Walk us through a, let's say a critical incident that actually changed your life and, you know, the way you see the world while you were in law enforcement, man. You could talk about either your time in San Francisco or in Oakland. What would be one critical incident? I know there was many. Oh, my goodness.
Starting point is 00:20:39 But we've got to pick one, dude, because we got to keep the show under two hours. All right? Well, each one I went through, I'll say that there was, that I would consider major critical incidences that there is more than one. I would list the ones that probably changed me. It was my sergeant getting killed. We had the four officers killed March 21st, 2009. That changed me, right?
Starting point is 00:21:10 Because I saw men who I believed were better than me at police work, die. And that was a very hard realization like, okay, I think I'm a badass. Like we all do at a certain point. You have to have some error of confidence, right? I feel like you're telling the truth on that. You know, every, I would say, cop's cop, or at least if you're, If you're a proactive cop, dude, there's days that you feel invincible. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:21:33 You're like, I can't get touched. I'm going to do this. Yeah, because you did some crazy shit probably, right? And that's great. That's your job is to go out there and get the bad guys, right? Like, I want to make sure everybody around, stay safe. There are bad people out there. And I know you've seen it.
Starting point is 00:21:46 And I guess that's the other problem, too, with police work in general. Most people have not seen evil. And I'm sure we'll get into it later. But there is real evil out there. And most people have not seen it. We've seen it. more times that I care to count. And I don't want normal people to see it.
Starting point is 00:22:03 But that's the hard part is because they judge us off of what we've done, even though they've never seen what violence looks like. It's not pretty. And we have to do it sometimes to keep people safe. Correct. So March 21st definitely changed me because I realized one, I always knew I wasn't invincible because I've always been hurt before. But watching those guys who were better than me go,
Starting point is 00:22:24 I was like, man, that was just really tough. to go through. And if you're comfortable, man, I mean, like I said, this is open book and we're very, very open on this podcast. But would you want to run down that scenario? Exactly what happened? Yeah, it was basically a car stop with a guy who was wanted. I don't remember what he was wanted for.
Starting point is 00:22:44 I believe it was a... It was a... Sexual assault or rape of a minor, if I believe. His name was LaVelle Mixon. And he was stopped by two of our OG motor cops. John Hagey and Sergeant Mark Dunnickin, and Dunnickin was amazing, right? Duncan had been homicide, street teams, taught him the academy. It was just funny as all hell.
Starting point is 00:23:05 And they went to stop him, and he had a fake license. And I don't remember all the details around the license, whether he had actually got it from DMV or it was just a total fake, but it wasn't coming back. They went up to get him, went to go pull him out of the driver's seat, and he basically popped out the window, shot both of them in the head, stood over them and executed them, right? went up to run and then what happened is obviously we have a full team come out our SWAT team
Starting point is 00:23:29 we got a lot of heat in the after action report and I think that's kind of bullshit in some ways I mean it's always good to do after action but a lot of people didn't know how Oakland worked those were our best of the best because they said it was an ad hoc team that went to go get him but basically what happened was we had had information Captain Joyner I believe who had more CIs anybody who knows that guy knew like half the city everybody yeah Yeah. He knew where he was, said he's there. And they made some mistakes as well as instead of just, you know, maybe, well, I only want to say mistakes. I wasn't the one making the calls. But the problem what they said was is maybe they should have just waited him out, throw gas, do some other things. They also weren't 100% sure he was in there. So they wanted to do hand check, right? We used to call it a hand check where you would just go in versus actually doing it. And unfortunately, when our team went to go in, you know, he was laying in the back room. with an SKS. And as, you know, AJ threw or keyed the door and Romans went to throw the flashbangs and the
Starting point is 00:24:30 smoking. And then SKS rifle? Yeah, rifle. What round? 7-6-2. Yeah. So we're talking about military grade guys in the city of Oakland. It's pretty normal.
Starting point is 00:24:40 Yep. And he had gotten that from a burglary, if I'm not mistaken out on like Modesto or something. The guy had not reported it. So when they went to open the door and I believe Romans got shot at that point in time, and then another sergeant, of ours who is the one who basically changed my mindset in the academy, he took a round through the shoulder, around off of his helmet, still made entry. And when they went in the back, they were in the back room, couldn't see anything from what I had heard. And he basically,
Starting point is 00:25:09 Sakai had taken a shot underneath his helmet at that point in time. They ended up still getting them in the back room. The other sergeant had put him down and, you know, they had got him out. So it was a rough incident for multiple different ways. And I do remember though, right after it, we started reppping what had happened wrong in the scenario. Like right away, we went to the range. People started doing the car stops and figuring out how we need to approach cars from there on. So the training was amazing. But yeah, it changed me because Dan Sakai was my superhero.
Starting point is 00:25:40 Of course. That guy was like, you know, he was so tactical, so smart. So like, he's who I wanted to be in police work. Like, okay, this guy has done SWAT. He's done K-9. He's done dope. He's done all this stuff. He's now promoted to a sergeant.
Starting point is 00:25:52 He's a guy who put his time and knew the answers and could get you the answers if he didn't know it. And he was so well liked. And it was just like, man, that definitely changed my perspective of, not what I thought about myself, because I'll be honest, I don't know if I really cared. I didn't want to die. But if I did, I almost felt like it was like,
Starting point is 00:26:12 you were okay with it. It was part of it, right? And I think that's a big decision that my wife and I made. when we started having kids, everybody told me you got to slow down, right? Like you got to stop. And her and I talked about it, and we had a real conversation. And I said, I policed this way for my entire career so far. I don't really want to change it because I think it's what keeps me on edge, like keeps me safe.
Starting point is 00:26:38 Keeps you going. Yes. And I said, I also, we're starting a family. And if you ever need help, if our kids. kids ever need help. I don't want a cop standing outside thinking about his family. I want a cop like me going in just zero regard for himself just to make sure you're safe. And I was like, so I have to do it like this. And she said, then do your job the way you have to do it. And that's the way I always went. So I didn't change the minute I started having a family, kids, and it just, yeah, I was okay if that happened
Starting point is 00:27:13 to me. I thought tackling anything head on from our training, I'd be okay. And ambush, obviously, I think they would get me, but everything else, I was like, man, I just have to stay sharp. Yeah. You're just, you're scored away. You're ready. Yep. You're ready to engage. You take it serious.
Starting point is 00:27:27 And that's good, man. That's what's needed, you know, especially being in that city and any city guys. Yeah. You know, we respect all cops from no matter if you patrol small towns. I think it's almost worse than small towns. Yeah. Because you're not as ready. Like, you just don't expect it, you know.
Starting point is 00:27:42 Complice. He kills, dude. Oh, well, that's why I actually got these tattoos. Like, I wasn't a big tattoo guy, but it says if you're not as if you. you wish for peace, prepare for war. Yeah. And I felt like in San Francisco, I wasn't on edge as much as I was in Oakland. And so I just always reminded myself, like, I just have to be ready because I don't want to be a
Starting point is 00:28:01 statistic 15, 20 years in my police career where I got lazy. Yeah, no, absolutely, man. And I used to remember, like, I had a couple friends that, you know, would leave Oakland to go to other departments because they're like, oh, man, they're giving me the boo. They're giving me a hard time here. They don't allow me to police. But then they end up coming back after a year because they're like, I'm bored. Oh, yeah, there's nothing like it.
Starting point is 00:28:20 There's nothing like it. Once you work in that city, man, it definitely changes you to an adrenaline junkie. Oh, for sure. But all right, man. So let's give advice to some of the beginners here because I get quite a few DMs, you know, throughout the week and daily about people joining law enforcement still in 2025, man. So what would be three pieces of good advice that you would tell somebody before they go ahead and try to tackle applying for the police?
Starting point is 00:28:45 What would you say from your perspective? If like, hey, dude, if you're not prepared in this way. Yep. If you're not ready for this. Yep. If you're, you know what I'm saying. Yeah, yeah, absolutely. I think so before you're applying, yeah, you better be in shape.
Starting point is 00:28:57 Like, that's number one. If you're not in shape, it's going to be so much more difficult for you. And I'm sure you had guys in your academy that were in great shape, and so did we. And the physical part was so tough for them where the physical part was not as tough for me. Like that was the easiest part of the academy. I liked it, right? It was like getting a workout in. So being physically, you know, in shape.
Starting point is 00:29:16 shape is going to help you. And excuse me, even in the long run, it's going to help you mitigate the stresses of the job anyways, being in shape. You're going to handle stress better. You're going to do all kinds of things. So be in shape physically. Two, I think you need to, I hate to say this because it is, but you've got to be humble, but at the same time, you've got to be confident. And I always have problems walking that line. Because, well, I'm sure you as well, you're successful, right? So, like, you know, like, I can do anything. And sometimes that confidence. It translates the wrong way. Yes. Like, they, people can think you're cocky. And he was like, well, I'm not, I can do it. Like, I know I can do this. Well, here's my perspective on that, right?
Starting point is 00:30:03 Because, you know, I don't know if Oakland was the way it was of what I'm going to articulate it. But when I was in Oakland, the dynamic was very toxic. And here's, here's, here's, it's, it's like a, a good toxic. It's like, it's like, it's like, for all my single guys, I like the toxic guys out there, right? You know what I'm saying? Like, yeah, you're just like, you know they're bad for you, but you still go back, right? So same thing in my department during the time I was in the police, right? It was just like, you had certain people that you just did not like.
Starting point is 00:30:37 Yeah. Because their demeanor, the way they spoke. the way they acted or the way they did their job right but at the end of the day you would still have their back yes that's just how our department rules right and i'm pretty sure majority of departments are like that most cops are like that you'll have each other's back no matter what the reason why i say that is because i remember a sergeant and a lieutenant from acesel when i was working under them on the task force they said paul you'll cocky motherfucker but you back it up yeah and that's the only reason why we stand you.
Starting point is 00:31:09 And I think, yeah, mine was similar because I did catch so much flack early on. And it wasn't for, I think a lot of it was, I was just really excited. Yeah. And I didn't really believe, like, I knew I didn't know that much. Like, I was smart enough to have a realization. I don't know all this stuff. But like, man, one of the units I was in, the guys got like a hundred guns that year. And I was just like, oh, my God, this squad gets so many guns.
Starting point is 00:31:32 And it happened to be, like, I had gotten two guns on a car stop. and I'd found one of them in the air filter compartment in FTO. And so they thought that I thought that I was son this guy. And I even got an award that the sergeant printed up for me and gave in front of this massive lining out of Eastmont. And I was like, no, it's not me doing it. Like, you know, but it was just, I was so happy to be doing police. But a lot of them did like me.
Starting point is 00:31:58 And I think it wasn't until I'd actually had been in my shooting and saved that chippy. I think that switched for a lot of people. I wasn't called cocky anymore. Like people probably gave me that I was cocky before then, but after then it was just more. No, they knew you were the real deal. Yeah, they'd take care of business. That I would do anything for any cop there. Like I literally would run into gunfire to help you.
Starting point is 00:32:19 And I think that's normal, dude. Yeah. I think it's normal, especially with rookie cops. You know, rookie cops, especially, like you say, you describe them, there's going to be a very small percentage of every single academy class where you're going to have, you know, a very small group of cops that want to be super proactive. They're going to go out there and do great police work. And then some of the more veteran officers are going to be like, oh, who's this guy?
Starting point is 00:32:40 I think he is. He hasn't been here long enough. Yes, absolutely. But at the end of the day, I also like to nurture my mentees. And I like to go ahead and push and lift people up, dude. That's what I learn about myself. Like, you know, especially in police work, man. I've always mentored people.
Starting point is 00:32:56 And I never thought about it like that back then, right? But just like you said, dude, like your sergeants, like the people that gave you advice, who you look up to, right? Absolutely. That's huge. And it goes back to being in business now, right? It translates right into business, but in life as well. So it's a lot of good values that you learn throughout police work.
Starting point is 00:33:13 And I feel like if it wasn't for police work, I wouldn't be the man that I am today. I'm pretty sure it was the same thing for you, brother. Maybe. I think that this stuff would have been pulled out of you regardless. Yeah. Like I think, I mean, obviously I know how you feel about what your police career did for you. But I am also a believer that a lot of these things are in us as people. and it takes a situation to pull them out of you.
Starting point is 00:33:38 You're right. And so it doesn't matter what it is, you just need to find the right thing. And it may have been police work for you. I had done a decent amount of stuff before. I swam through college. I was a D1 swimmer. Been through some rough stuff. My brother had passed away.
Starting point is 00:33:51 And so like there were situations I don't think I had to go through, but I've always risen to the occasion. So it's like, whatever it is, the situation arises is going to pull something out of me to perform. Yeah. You're going to make it happen. Going to make it happen. And I know that's you. You've made all this stuff happen.
Starting point is 00:34:06 And it's... It wasn't always like that, man. It wasn't always like that. I think what ended up pushed me was, to be honest, was, well, no, in corporate America, I did do pretty well. Yeah. But then what I will tell you is I wasn't fulfilled. Yes.
Starting point is 00:34:19 So police work, I was fulfilled. I'll put all the way to the end, you know? Yeah. But let's shift perspectives now. Let's shift a little to what's going on now, the world, okay? You know, this morning I had did a post on my... my Facebook profile about a critical incident that happened. Just I think about less than a week ago, dude,
Starting point is 00:34:40 on a train in Charlotte with a murder. Like, you know, straight up murder that just stabbed an innocent Ukrainian woman on the train while she's sitting there going to work or whatnot, right? Yes. But what made me really angry about this, man. And, you know, I'm such a big, I guess you could say, I don't know, man, like I like to stand up for people. I like to go ahead and like, I guess you could say I'm a protector.
Starting point is 00:35:09 For sure. I am the dude that would be like the first to two, one at the door. Hey, dude, we're going to go handle business now. We're going to go ahead and take care of this. Let's go. I'm like, dude, let's do it. Yep. You know?
Starting point is 00:35:20 So it really pisses me off because there's a lot of video out there, man, that shows that no one did anything during that incident, man. So, you know, a couple, couple key details into this incident. You know, people are blaming the cops for not. patrolling the train. Obviously, they're making it political now. They're saying that the judges that let this man off because he did go to jail like over 15 times. They're trying to blame that he, you know, has some mental issues and they're blaming
Starting point is 00:35:55 it on that. Right. So what's your take on this incident? Yeah, that's a tough one, right? So, well, obviously, just like you said, it's horrible what happened, right? It's just, it's not horrible. It's disgusting. It is.
Starting point is 00:36:07 That that happens in current day America where you think that you should be able to live, you know, free. Yeah. Be able to pursue happiness and be safe, right? And I think one of my FTO said it best, like when we first started arresting people and the case was wouldn't go, he said to me to keep me focused and keep me energetic. He says, we cannot control what happens after. we take them in. We do our job. Everything else you have to let go of. And that got tougher and tougher as I'm sure you were aware. I had guys that pulled guns on me and they didn't get charged. Was in a shooting where the guy shot at me. I got the gun. I couldn't tell if it was the driver,
Starting point is 00:36:48 the passenger was shot. So I just said, I don't know who it was, but it was gunshots. Gun, driver, GSW or residue on them, everything when we tested them. And the case went nowhere. He got like three months probation for like a hit and run with great. the injury on a taxi driver. So those are sometimes tough to swallow, but I think as police officers, and that's why they want to blame the police, but I don't think they understand. Cops just want to do good work. Like we want to take people to jail that are bad.
Starting point is 00:37:17 We want to keep people safe. Sometimes people do get jaded and police work because they have been doing it for so long, and nothing happens when you end up doing this job or you get burned by administrations or whatever it is, that's tough. But I think that we need to hold the people accountable who don't keep these people in jail. That's what my take is, is that if we take someone to jail, we have done our job. Just like if a cop let someone go for DUI or something else and they go on and crash and kill somebody, they will absolutely hold that cop liable.
Starting point is 00:37:52 When you had the stop and you let this person continue to drive and they wrecked and killed another family, you're going. You're done. They will hold you responsible for that. Or it's like going to a domestic violence situation and you don't take the person to jail. And it's a mandatory arrest. Yes. If you guys didn't know that, cops have to arrest somebody when it's domestic violence.
Starting point is 00:38:13 Even if you guys just push each other on the shoulder, guys. Oh, no. Just an accusation. Yeah. No, 100%. Oh, he hit me. Oh, okay. Because it's happened before.
Starting point is 00:38:24 And case law was created where the cop was just like, okay, they take the word for it. Right. go take a walk, and then somebody comes back, ends up killing the other spouse, right? Yes. So same thing in this situation, man. I mean, it's sickening that, you know, they allow criminals just like that out of jail multiple times. I mean, when is enough, enough, dude? I think we've already had enough.
Starting point is 00:38:47 Like, it's enough already. I think it's going to blow up. And, dude, it's going to shift a couple of policies out there. I would hope so because there needs to be some accountability. And I'm all for, you know, we need defense attorneys. We need public defenders. And it needs to be done properly. If someone, you have the right to defend yourself as far as like in a court case, you shouldn't be found guilty just because.
Starting point is 00:39:14 But if you are guilty of something and you do do something, somebody needs to be accountable for that sentence that's handed down to you. Yeah. So if a judge is just letting people go and then something else happens, I mean, I would always. feel a certain way. For instance, I would take people to jail and my thought process was, I know this is not going to get charged, but I would just ask certain questions. Like if a guy was a booster and he would just break into cars all the time and I say, how many cars do you break into a day, whatever, just chopping up with them and be like, okay, this guy breaks into 13 cars a night. That means tomorrow, 13 people are going to wake up feeling real shitty because the car window is
Starting point is 00:39:52 broken. Maybe they had a job appointment, maybe they had whatever. You don't know how many people this one person can affect. It's a ripple effect. Absolutely. So I take them to jail. So I take them to jail. So I take them to this person cannot hurt anybody else. They cannot cause any other chaos. So I'm going to take them. Everybody's like, hey, that shit's pointless. It's not going anywhere. They're not going to charge him for the dope. Whatever it was. That's so funny, man. I used to get that as a rookie all the time. They're like, dude, why are you racing this guy? That's not enough dope to like keep him in jail for a long time. And I'm like, dude, I don't care. I'm here doing my job. That's it. That's it. I get paid by the hour. That's it. I get paid. I'm here to provide customer service my way. You know what I'm saying?
Starting point is 00:40:30 But let's talk about the media, dude. I think it's complete bullshit. Yeah. That the media is not covering this incident the way they're supposed to be because let's say it was reversed, bro. And absolutely, we're Latinos. Okay. I'm proving a Mexican. We're from freaking California. Yep. One of the most diverse states in the United States, guys. So before I start hearing comments or anything or do, oh, man, you guys want some racist. Nah, dude. dude, my wife black. All right? Yeah.
Starting point is 00:40:56 That's how diverse we are. That's what racist would say. So that's what we're going to tell you. Exactly. There you go. But with that being said, if it was reversed, dude, if it was a white guy, kind of a black woman, oh, dude, all the city's would be on fire. Oakland would be on fire right now.
Starting point is 00:41:14 We get hit up our homies being like, yo, bro, what's up? Yeah. Can we go do what you guys are doing? Right. Yeah. Absolutely. Well, I mean, I experienced the firsthand in one of the shootings I was in. they had riots and protests after it because I got into shooting with a person and they didn't know I was Hispanic.
Starting point is 00:41:32 We're literally a day before I was talking to all the members of the church or businesses the day before, then the next day they're on the news talking shit about me. So I've seen it happen and you're absolutely right. If this was reversed, it would happen. And I think there's a systematic problem. Like there's just an issue. It's changed my viewpoint a little bit since I got out of policing, but you have to look at the communities. You have to look. And I mean, I'm sure it used to bug you.
Starting point is 00:41:57 It used to bug the hell on me. When I was in Oakland and I would see Hispanics, because that's obviously who I identify with. Yeah. I'm first generation. I know how hard my grandparents never spoke English. My father didn't speak English to the second grade. I know how hard they worked and what they did to provide me with the life I have
Starting point is 00:42:13 and then, you know, what I'm able to do. When I would see these guys start hanging out in the projects, the Hispanics, especially, and acting a certain way, what is wrong with you? And then I ask, what does your dad do? oh, he's a landscaper, what's your mom do? She cleans houses. Why are you out here acting this way?
Starting point is 00:42:30 Like, do you not understand the opportunity? Yes. And so, and I don't know if it's the system that's broken that they put these people in these concrete jungles and they just tell them to live a certain way. And they don't see outside their little block. It's environment-based, dude. 110%. It's like I still got friends that are freaking my age, 37, and they still talk like they're
Starting point is 00:42:49 freaking 15, bro. And obviously, I don't hang around with them or talk to them. but I still know that they do. And that's just the way it is in certain neighborhoods. They just never get out of that bubble. Yes. Right. And I think it is systematic.
Starting point is 00:43:03 I think it is because you go to these houses, you go to these neighborhoods, and you're like, why do you do this? And then you really get to know the person, and that's all they know. Yeah. And I think the other two is there's a massive disconnect. And I think this is part of the bigger change. And whether you're on the left or the right, whatever it is, I have encountered a lot of people.
Starting point is 00:43:21 Obviously, I worked in San Francisco, and I used to protect a lot of people on the left. So I get to talk to some of these people, and especially when I transitioned out of police work, I never forget it. I worked with a very powerful family that was building all the homeless encampments in San Francisco. And I said, I don't think these people actually want homes.
Starting point is 00:43:39 They got millions of dollars from the city of San Francisco to build these things. And I said to them, I said, if you would like to talk to some of the homeless, I know a really good officer who would love to take you guys around to these encampments to actually talk to the homeless people to see if you can help them with what they actually need. And they're like, oh, we never thought about that.
Starting point is 00:43:56 And I think that there's a disconnect with some of the elites who think that they just know better than everybody else. Right. So they don't think, you know, oh, maybe we should see it. So I think there's a disconnect there. And I don't know. I hope there's a change. It is funny how the media will portray one thing and not the other.
Starting point is 00:44:15 Right. And that's unfair. Yeah, I don't know. Yeah. I mean, like I always see. saying, I always say this to my parents because they love watching the news, man. I'm like, don't watch that shit. That shit's all negativity.
Starting point is 00:44:27 That shit all, like, it feeds into the agenda, fear. Oh, fear, huge. Don't do anything. Stay normal, conform. Fuck that, dude. Yeah. It's just like, we're here to level up. Well, well, ultimately, you shouldn't really care.
Starting point is 00:44:41 I mean, Martin Luther King always had some of the best speeches about people's character. That's the most important thing. And I learned that in Oakland, especially. like, I don't care if you were purple. If you were in blue, like you were my brother, you were my sister. Like, that was it to me. And I really think we've gotten away from that. And I don't know how any of that matters what you are.
Starting point is 00:45:03 Because, I mean, we're here in America. I don't care where you came from, where you've been, whatever it is, if you're here and you want to be, have a better life, and that's what you should be striving towards. But these people want to play these, you know, I don't know. I don't know why the race thing is so important right now for people because it doesn't really matter.
Starting point is 00:45:21 All ties back into politics. For sure. Who the president is right now and what it's perceived. And it's all part of this bigger agenda, man. But with that being said, you know, the guy's getting federally charged. Thank God. Yeah, they're pulling the case. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:45:37 Trump just made an announcement on that the other night. So kudos to him. But yeah, dude, things need to change. And I think, you know, we need to go ahead and go back to the old school of letting police police, man. Yeah. Because that was one of the, I'll be honest with you, man. That was one of the main reasons why I ended up believing law enforcement because I was in California. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:45:55 Right. And it was Game of Thrones. Game of Thrones guys, meaning that, like, they will screw you if you do actual real police work. Imagine if you're a cop right now. Not only in California, but I know in different other states where you pull somebody over and they say some false allegations. Now you're put on probation. Now you can't go ahead and actually do your job. You're sat at a desk and now you're awaiting your faith because some asses.
Starting point is 00:46:20 wanted to go ahead and make a complaint. At the end of the day, is that right? Absolutely not. I mean, dude, what is your take on that? Yeah, it's a complete opposite of what due process actually should be. You're guilty from the beginning in police work. 100%. You're guilty of it, and then you have to prove your innocence.
Starting point is 00:46:38 It's not like there's, it's not like a search warrant where you've written all this probable cause, and now you have to prove it on the other side. No, literally you are guilty just by them saying something, and you have to fight to get it back. And then the next time, why would you take that risk? Why would you take that chance when all of a sudden your entire life is on the line, right? And then if you ever get sued, you have to list all of your assets whenever they want to sue you. So it's like you realize all of a sudden what you're putting at risk, you know, when you're trying to just help people, you know, and especially people that hate us. I don't know how many people, you know, pennies on the
Starting point is 00:47:16 dollar. We used to run in and go do things for people that couldn't stand us. But we did it day in and day out. So yeah, it's rough. It's the way it goes, man. But without being said, let's transition to some more positivity here at the level of guys. All right. So what was the last year you actually served? 2017. Okay. So in 2017, you end up transitioning out. Yep. You end up transitioning out. And then what was life after policing? Oh, man. First year was pretty rough just because I got hurt multiple times. So please scenario, dude. How many kids? Four kids? What was your guys mindset? We guys are like, we had three kids at the time. We have four now. But yeah, at that time, no, I was ultimately
Starting point is 00:48:02 going to try to build spec homes with my dad. That's what we were going to do. Build spec homes, because he's a general contractor, does amazing work, always wanted to do it. My little brother who passed away was going to do it with him. So he was kind of caught in limbo, just still doing insurance jobs, and he does a really good job with him. But I figured, okay, did tons of things after cop. I'd been hurt multiple times. blew my neck, blew my back. It was on a lot of pain killers, nerve blockers, muscle relaxers. The department would not
Starting point is 00:48:28 fix me. They just fought me tooth and nail, and I was in so much pain, and I was just like, I'm done. Like, I can do something else. So you didn't even medically retire? No. I didn't take retirement. Yeah, no. Damn. I didn't get a damn thing. Just walked. Yeah. And I would have won it in the long run.
Starting point is 00:48:46 I had an attorney, and we would have won it in the long run. I just know that they would have owned me and I still want to be active. I had three daughters at the time. So it was like I still wanted to be a dad for them. I didn't want to be a shell because I had seen cops that had gone through the workers' comp system. It was just brutal how they had to just lay on the couch, not leave their house. It wasn't the life for me. I was like, I still want to be active. So the first year I walked away, I spent a lot of time just getting my mind right and my body right because I couldn't believe what had happened to me. You know, I had not been a
Starting point is 00:49:19 rookie of the year in Oakland, Medal of Valor from Oakland, Life Saving War, CHP, gold medal of valor from San Francisco, Medal of Honor from our POA, and I just got fucking right out with the trash. Isn't that suck? Yeah, it does. You're like, was that just a number, bro? Well, you know what's funny is my primary FTO, it happened to him. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:49:37 Solid cop and a complaint had come around, and he almost went crazy, and he medicaled out on a psych, and then I met up with him one more time, and he told me, like, he, he, you He told me the same thing. We went out to breakfast. He's like, do not trust these fuckers, the departments. Do not trust them, this and that. And I was like, oh, dude, he's lost it. Like, I was like, that ain't going to happen to me.
Starting point is 00:49:58 And then sure enough, it happened to me. And I was like, oh, my God, I cannot believe. So it took me a while to come to terms with that, how I went into the police department and how I got out of it, the way it had aged me over 10 years and what had had done to my body. And I was like, man, I cannot believe this. So it took me a good while to kind of recover from that. Like, get right.
Starting point is 00:50:16 Get physically strong. I had a couple back surgeries. two back surgeries to fix me. But yeah, the first year was rough, just trying to find myself. So you're going through this transition. Then what? Well, basically, I didn't trust the government at that point in time because of how I got treated. And, I mean, it was nuts what they actually put me through.
Starting point is 00:50:43 They would subpoena all of my records for bank accounts, all kinds of things. the one of the city because they basically said I was lying about my injury because they had pictures of me picking up my girls. And I never got in trouble because I just didn't, I told the truth. I was like, I got three daughters. Yes, I picked them up. Yes, I still swim because I have to move. I've been through three shootings. You can't just keep me locked in my house. I'm going to go crazy. Like, no way. So I didn't trust politics or the city or governments after that point. And we had sold our house in Northern California, had done pretty well. And I had a buddy who, kept talking me about Bitcoin. And he was like, hey, dude, the biggest thing was that you couldn't
Starting point is 00:51:23 confiscate it and it was sovereign. So I was like, well, I don't trust banks. I don't trust governments now. So I started diving into crypto curse. Such a rebel. Yeah, basically, that's what it was. So you have a buddy who you trusted, go ahead and tell you, hey, dude, Bitcoin crypto's the move. Yep. Yeah. And did you just jump right in? Like, how'd that work out? I didn't go all in. I took a portion of it because everybody told me, I was crazy, right? They're like, because I originally called this guy crazy when he was doing it, because he put a large amount in right off the bat. And it took me like a year because I first saw it when I was a cop, but I couldn't touch it because of all of our cash seizures. I was like, man,
Starting point is 00:52:01 this would be too weird for me buying this dark web type thing when I first saw it. So, but when I wasn't a cop, I dove into it and I put like 40 grand in. And within like six weeks, it was 250K. And I was like, what your wife saying? She said, wow, that's good, honey. not so a lot like that pretty much she's like wow I know you can do it yeah wow it's because you're an overachiever bro she's like not I'll buy it it was just like she was just like as long as the card works when she swipes yeah yeah that's all I don't think she has any passwords to any accounts no nothing it's just like she's like that meme of just like it swipes and it works like okay it's good then we're good yeah yeah as long as I can make it happen and that's always been my thing
Starting point is 00:52:46 is that she's never had to work other than being a mother, which is the hardest job in the world. It is. So the minute we got together, you know, she had a job. And then I said, you don't have to work. Yeah. And then she was like, okay, and start having kids. And she's never worked other than, like I said, being a mom, which is super, super tough. It is.
Starting point is 00:53:05 But yeah, that's it. So I've always just said, I'm going to make it happen. We need money. I'm going to make it happen. So you ended up transitioning 40,000. And this is in 2017? Okay. So in 2017, you end up investing 40K, which, I mean, dude, in 2017, as even a retiree cop, 40K is a nice chunk of change.
Starting point is 00:53:25 That's for sure. It is. It is. A lot of people do. They trip off just investing like $1,000 sometimes, right? Absolutely, yeah. So 40K and then you end up flipping it to a quarter mill. What happens next?
Starting point is 00:53:36 Then I thought I was a genius. And I said I'm the greatest gift of Wall Street. Ain't got nothing on me. I thought I was the wolf of Wall Street. No, no, no. Like we made it. Yeah, we did it. Yeah, yeah.
Starting point is 00:53:49 I was, you know, wiping my eyes with $100 bills. No, no. So it was $250K and then it crashed. We all thought I was going to the moon at that point in time. Futures markets were just coming out for it. CFTC was coming out of a thing and then the whole market crashed. I wasn't down. I mean, I lost, it had dropped down to like $80, right?
Starting point is 00:54:09 The $40K turned to $250 and then instantly went down like $80K. I was still up. Yeah, you were still up. So I was like, okay, all right. that didn't go. I didn't keep going the way they thought it was going to keep going. So I was like, okay, this isn't the end-all be-all. And I was still trying to figure it out. We still had some decent money from selling our houses in the Bay Area. I did run a spearfishing retail business, and I taught free diving, and I built gear. So we had that as well to like just bring in some money.
Starting point is 00:54:37 And then I worked construction with my dad when he needed me three days a week. So I did that stuff, but I still knew crypto was the future. Like all those things were good. And we could live of it, but it wasn't creating like what I was surrounded by Newport Beach, right? That wasn't going to make me millions. Yeah, Newport, Newport's another level, brother. Oh, I was. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:54:58 I mean, like one of my neighbors, you know, they started acorns. Another one just sold his company for $250 million. The guy down the street literally moves countries with the amount of money he has. So the people that started the baby carrots lived two blocks from us. just opulent type of wealth, like just crazy levels. No, absolutely. So what was the next move after that? Yeah, so I just started studying.
Starting point is 00:55:22 I just started listening to everything I could, reading everything I could, jumping into telegram, discords, whatever it was, and talking to some of these early people in it, like investors. And I realized very quickly these people were smart. Like, okay, being in police work, you can kind of like tell like when people are, you know, just, all right, this is a knuckle. dragger or like, ooh, this guy has some insight. And I could tell these guys were smart. And what they were talking about and when I was learning about financial markets, I could see where it was
Starting point is 00:55:53 going. And the biggest thing is our phones, they're changing everything, adoption curves, like how technology moves. Even when I coach swimming, we tried to move people from a cash check paying system to using card. And there was a huge uproar. We lost like half our team because we weren't getting paid on time all time. So I said, hey, we're moving to this system where you put your credit card or your debit card in. And it just goes, pays it. And they're like, you can't tell us how we're going to pay. And I was like, okay, well, and half of them left. This is like early 2000s. And so I just saw that, okay, this is coming. And I ended up cashing out my retirement at that time. It was like $100, 110 grand maybe. I cashed out my retirement and my deferred comp. And I told my dad and I talked to
Starting point is 00:56:40 my wife and I said, hey, I'm going all in. We looked at real estate. We actually came out here back then doing spec homes, maybe getting into some multifamily. And I was like, none of this is going to do what I think this will do. And so we went all in with like 110K and like 2019 at the bottom of the bare market when people were saying it was dead. Yeah. So 110K investment. And then when did it start pushing it to the limit. Yeah. So what happened was as the cycle ramped up, crypto usually is on a four-year cycle that may change with institutional flow coming in this year.
Starting point is 00:57:18 We'll see. But it's usually on a four-year cycle based on this mechanism called the halving. Some people argue that it's also just the business cycle or liquidity events. But every four years, there's a massive upturn and then a downturn. And we were just ramping up. And I had found basically like when you mentioned blockfi, They were the first yield platform that would give you yield on your Bitcoin or your Ethereum or whatever it was, first instrument that really did that for traditional folks, like normal folks.
Starting point is 00:57:47 So when they came out with their product, what I did was I had put $10,000 in Ethereum at like $156. And I had put around $80 into Bitcoin and then some other ones off to the side. When that product came out, I basically supersized more portfolio. Every time the token would double in price, I would borrow a lot. half of it and buy more of it. And so I did that with Bitcoin from pretty much $10,000 all the way up to like $40,000 and then Ethereum from $156 all the way up to like $2,500. And I just kept supersizing my portfolio to where my personal stack went from like $150,000 to like, I don't know, $2.5, $3 million, somewhere in that range. Wow. Yeah. So at that stage of the game,
Starting point is 00:58:32 what is your thought process? You're like, is this a longevity play? Are you, investing in other investments. What was your thought process behind? Yeah. So at that point in time, I was surrounded by wealthy people and who loved to talk to me because they like police stories, right? So and a lot of financial people. So I met my current partner, Britt, who works with me now. He worked for an investment bank, basically, and he was their institutional trader on their desk. him and I would talk about markets and I was trying to learn from him. My partner, who ended up being my partner, was my neighbor. Their family started acorns.
Starting point is 00:59:12 They did e-offering, took Monster or was Hanson's public. And I basically started orange-pilling these guys, we call it. I started getting them in on Bitcoin. I would send them if things, tell them to look at it, and they all got in it. They wanted to start a fund. So I originally did a pitch deck and I took this fund and I started going to wealthy people and like we started pitching them on it and saying, hey, this and that. Then I just realized very quickly, I was like,
Starting point is 00:59:34 I don't want to manage people's money. I'm not a money manager. I have no idea. I'm comfortable with my own. No idea. Then I said, well, I'm really good at security stuff. There's a mining play in crypto. I was like, let's be miners.
Starting point is 00:59:47 So my partner said, okay. So basically, we ripped out the bottom floor where Acorn started, and I built a large scale Ethereum mine, like 600 GPUs. And I started mining. Wow. Yeah. And for the beginners that are listening right now, and they're like, dude, this sounds pretty interesting.
Starting point is 01:00:07 What is mining with crypto? Yeah, so mining is basically, it's a proof of work concept. Ethereum is no longer proof of work. They pretty much killed GPU mining for everybody. Bitcoin is still mining. You can still mine Bitcoin. A6, though, so it's applied. I don't remember what exactly an A6 stands for,
Starting point is 01:00:27 but it's a computer that only mines Bitcoin. So basically there's an algorithm and a problem. and the machines try to solve this problem. And if it solves the problem, it gets the block reward. Every 10 minutes in Bitcoin, there's a new block. And if your machine solves it, you get the reward for it. So basically, my GPUs for Ethereum would solve these problems. And then you can either solo mine or go to a liquidity pool.
Starting point is 01:00:51 It's all kind of technical stuff. But basically, I was making really good money. I was doing like 1.2 Bitcoin a month because we settled in Bitcoin. Or it was like 15 to 17 Ethereum. And in cash, I was making anywhere from 40 to 70 grand. and it was just pretty much myself, my father, his son, and my partner. What is everyone else telling you right now when you're like trying to explain this concept or are you keeping it to yourself?
Starting point is 01:01:13 I pretty much just kept it to myself because we didn't need anybody. I built the mine. My partner and I pretty much funded it ourselves. I just built it. I was able to go get all the GPUs. I learned how to do it like just getting on the interwebs and like figuring out how to actually configured the GPUs. I knew how to build computers from like gaming back in the day. So I just built them all and started just building this thing. And then with a cash flow of like,
Starting point is 01:01:43 you know, 40 to 70 grand a month with no employees, with no partners with no, I didn't need anybody. It's great. Yeah. So it was like I had zero overhead minus like a $10,000 power bill and $2,000 rent. It was just hand over fist for us at that time. Yeah. It's extremely profitable with the margins, man. That's awesome. So here's the million dollar question. It truly is because there's going to be people who are going to ask and they're going to be like, dude, how do you do it? So how did you do it? How did you go ahead and learn how to go ahead and mine for Bitcoin?
Starting point is 01:02:16 I just got online in the forums and I had figured out there was guys who had done it before. And actually, I'll give a shout to one of the OG miners. He, I content I put on on Twitter from anonymous shit poster, you know, account that I had and say, hey, I really want to do this stuff. How do you do it? And he broke it down for me. And then had another consultation. I paid a lot of money for another guy who had a very big YouTube channel. And I said, hey, I'll pay you 500 bucks for an hour of your time. And he was like, I don't really do this. And I was like, I know, but I've watched all your videos, but I have some questions. And I was like, 500,000 bucks, what do you want? And I was like, I just want to spend an hour.
Starting point is 01:02:56 I have some questions. I'm not asking for all the secret sauce, but just if you could point me in the right right direction because I don't want to make stupid mistakes that are going to cost me bigger money. And I said, here's what I'm trying to do. Here's what it is. And he did it. He got on the phone with me. And then I figured out, okay, this is how I do this. And I was pretty good about having mentors. I didn't make a lot of mistakes when I was younger because my dad either put good coaches in front of me or himself or whatever. I just, I listened to people who were living a good life and I just didn't have to make those mistakes myself. So I knew from this, I was like, okay, I just need to find somebody who's crushing it in this space. And I'm just going to pay them
Starting point is 01:03:35 to tell me what they know and not make the mistakes myself and waste thousands of dollars doing it. And that's what I did. And I got access to these guys. Dude, and I feel like, you know, ever since I got into the online space, that's exactly what I've done every single step of the way. It's just I've just paid people that are more experienced, already successful. Yep. And they'd have the exact information and the blueprint.
Starting point is 01:04:00 Yeah. And the road that they can make it very easy for me. Yeah. Well, they're just also going to confirm what you maybe already know as well. Because you don't know. Because unless you've done it already,
Starting point is 01:04:11 sometimes you just need that confirmation like, okay, I'm doing the right thing. And just keep forging forward. And maybe they haven't thought of something you're doing and they're like, oh, that's a really good idea. And then you're like, okay, I can really push this one hard. And that's what I did. No, I love that, man.
Starting point is 01:04:25 And then overall, you've been doing this since 2017 now all the way up to where we're currently in, what is this, September of 2025? Yep. Yeah, it's insane, dude. Yeah. So you've been able to go ahead and scale your crypto business with that. So now you're getting to more of mentorship and coaching in the online space. And it's time because you're like, dude, I'm not a selfie guy, right? Neither was I.
Starting point is 01:04:47 But I feel like people that have success in certain niches and industries, you are doing yourself a disservice by not giving access to people because just like you said dude you paid somebody off of youtube the guy's like i really don't know this that is the stupidest thing in my opinion that any youtubeer will following yeah i can do is not have a coaching program right especially if you have a huge following right and the i'm the reverse yeah i don't got a massive following on youtube yeah i need a start like i was telling you dude yeah i need a start but i've been massively you know decently successful in the coaching space but i focus on niched businesses so with Within your program, within your mentorship, basically you take a beginner, okay?
Starting point is 01:05:30 And what is the process that you take a beginner to go ahead and start generating the same type of either revenue or results that you've been able to experience? Well, I think the biggest thing that I first do is I give them a financial education from my point of view. Because I love that. A lot of people don't have an understanding of what money truly is. So I try to do that to like, hey, you know, money is ultimately the value that you create in the world. and whether or not you're being compensated fairly for it, right? It's your energy. So we start there, and then I also supplement a lot of other things
Starting point is 01:06:01 because I think a lot of people are sometimes afraid to be called out or compromised or whatever. Like it's my way or the highway where I'm like, I have only been successful because I feel like I take a lot of ideas from everybody else and then I create my own. But I want you to listen to other people as well. So it's not just me that you're listening to because it's just, you know, so that's the other. things. I give a lot of resources, things that I use on my journey. And then I think the other thing
Starting point is 01:06:28 that I do is I try to make it safe for them so that they understand, okay, this is a safe place. And then I do, you know, like I've just had some actually some calls since we've been back from Dallas. And the minute I start going on, and I was like, I'm going to show you a lot today, just so you know that this is all real. Because most people don't understand how the crypto space works. And as soon as I do it, they're like, oh my goodness, I did not understand how large and how many things are being built in this space. And that's what it looks like to start with me. Because basically I'll show you everything
Starting point is 01:06:57 and then we'll start getting the reps in because you have to learn it. It's still early. You know, a couple of things that you said, man, it ties into directly into your law enforcement career when you had your sergeant who was great at everything
Starting point is 01:07:09 and, you know, he would show you the path very similar attributes as how you were probably talking to your current clients, right? So very unique how that happens, guys. You know, your environment, really, really, really reflects the type of person that you are or the experiences that you've gone through, right?
Starting point is 01:07:27 Great, man. So if somebody wanted to get into crypto now, okay, what would be three steps that you would give a beginner right now listening to this? And they're like, dude, how can I go ahead and do more research to see if this is for me? Research is interesting because you're going to get... From a beginner perspective.
Starting point is 01:07:48 Yeah. Because I know you're like super genius on this. Yeah, yeah. I'm deep in the weeds on it. I mean, um, the research from a beginner, man,
Starting point is 01:07:57 that's a tough one. Would you say like a podcast, a specific YouTube channel, like somebody like you can refer to? I mean, yeah, I would say the number one podcast that I always recommend is, um,
Starting point is 01:08:09 we study billionaires and it was Michael Saylor and Preston Pish. And this is from 2020. Yeah. That's the number one podcast I say because when you hear that, that's the biggest thing that changes your financial understandings. That's the number one podcast that I, I like for Normies. Because yeah, like you said, yeah, that's what we call them normies.
Starting point is 01:08:25 Because in the early days, we were listening to way different people. And there are people that talked about Bitcoin on like Rogan Show for a long time. Andreas Antonopoulos is one of the early bitcoins that changed a lot of our understanding of it. But Michael Saylor changed it for traditional folks. He is, you know, was the head of micro strategy, now strategy. And people really resonate with what he has to say. A podcast that I do listen to on the regular And actually we were in Discord rooms together
Starting point is 01:08:52 Back in 2017 is a guy named Scott Milker Wolf of All Streets. That's a great podcast that's on YouTube. He runs it every day. And you can actually probably go back And see everything that he has done. That's a great place to start as well. And then there's another guy who actually
Starting point is 01:09:08 I was in Discord rooms back in 2017 Followed my thing. A lot of these guys, we have similar trajectories, right? Some of us made a lot of money, lost it all is another guy named Rand Nooner and I was actually listening to him on the way over here. He made a ton of money in 2017 like I'm going to say $100 million and then lost it all. Same thing with the hedge fund in the next run and he's back up again. So like these are guys
Starting point is 01:09:32 that have been the space. They went on and created content. Some of the guys that I started with went on and started trading. There's a guy he started trading. His name's Crypto Face. Unreal trader trades literally $20 million positions now. I went into the investing, leveraging and did no social media. Cryptoface started trading. One of the most successful traders now is hunted by big exchanges. Scott Malcolm and Ran Nooner started trading, you know, went on to do hedge funds and a very successful podcast. And I just sat there and just provided for my family. But dude, I mean, you have a life what I like to call life by design. You know, you have a beautiful family dude. You're able to do what you want. You're able to go ahead
Starting point is 01:10:10 and you have the options. So that's what it's about, right? Yeah. So what would you say is your biggest why right now, dude? What would you say is your biggest why? I mean, it's always my family. Of course. Yeah, it's always my family. Is there something specific within your family? Like maybe building, you know, options for your girls or your son or yes and no. I get torn on that.
Starting point is 01:10:32 And my wife and I have talked about that multiple times. I want to give my kids opportunity, but I don't want to give them wealth, right? Okay. At all. I like that. I like zero wealth for them. Yeah. And I don't mind helping them because, you know, the,
Starting point is 01:10:46 big thing my father, I remember him giving, he always gave whatever he could, right? I needed 20 bucks for gas. I needed whatever. Always did it. And I saw the work he did and it just, you know, I so appreciate how hard he worked. And then my mom kept the house afloat. So like I always knew what his dollar was worth. And I remember I had just bought our house or I were getting ready to buy the house. I had bought my wife's ring, which was really expensive. I was working a ton of overtime. And I didn't have the deposit for our house. So my dad helped me with the down payment, right? And it wasn't much because I did a 3.5, but I knew what that money was worth to him because I knew how hard he worked, right? So there was like 15 grand is what he gave me or 17 grand to put our
Starting point is 01:11:26 first down payment down. And so I think for my kids, I'll help them with things like that, but I definitely don't want to leave them a fund or anything like that because I've seen what that does. So I think the really good thing for me that I want to leave them is an opportunity where like if they want to build something, if they want to go and do something, I will provide the opportunity, whether I will help seed fund it, whether... Knowledge.
Starting point is 01:11:51 Yeah, whether I'll give them the job that they need within it, but I don't necessarily want the nepotism of it. I want them to earn their position. Right. Because my dad, I wasn't lead man when I started working construction. I was low man on the total pole. I did the shit jobs, right? Sometimes when I was digging ditches,
Starting point is 01:12:07 I didn't even get the tool. Like I had to use the hand tools where everybody else is using all the rototillers and everything else. So he didn't give me, you know, foreman right off the bat. I had to earn that shit for 10 years of hard work with him. So, yeah, because I already think my kids as much as I love them. I think they're soft. I think they're not like, you know, I didn't grow up as hard as my dad did.
Starting point is 01:12:28 And I know my kids are growing up amazing. And I just want them to have that drive because I know you didn't get anything. I don't feel like I got a whole lot. I never expected anything from my parents. And I think I've just seen families that go sideways when the kids. kids are given everything. Dude, that's a great perspective, man. I mean, I've seen it both ways, you know, especially interviewing quite a few people
Starting point is 01:12:48 on this podcast now where, you know, it's usually two different paths, right, to generalize it. It's one path of like, you got to make it happen because you go through the mud. You go through the trenches. You go through the trenches and you just have to make it happen from all the pain and the experiences and then not wanting to be in that environment anymore, right? Absolutely. And then the second phase is typically, you know, you were raised in a household where, you know,
Starting point is 01:13:08 your parents, they guided you. Yeah. They told you and the parents probably had a great job or they were probably a great role model. So they already had the inspirations to be like their parents, right? So I've seen it both ways. But no, I like it, dude. I like the breakdown. You're giving them the options, possibly like JV with them,
Starting point is 01:13:25 have them do all the hard work and the fundamentals to keep them successful, right? Yeah. Because what's the point of giving them the success automatically and then they don't know how to run it? Well, and I think the other thing too is that, you know, and I'm sure you may or may not feel a certain way about this, everything that you've built, you built. Yeah. Like you did it. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:13:47 Pride. There's in a sense of pride. And also you've built that pathway to know no matter what you encounter in life, you can survive it. 100% because of whatever you come through. Whereas like if I seed a $5 million project for one of my kids and they go on and build this massive company and then it crashes, are they going to wait for me to seed another one for them to fail on it? Or do they know?
Starting point is 01:14:12 You know, like I built this. It all went away. I can do it again, right? So like if everything fails for me, I know I can go out there and I can start again. Like I can do it. It's going to suck. But I know that I can do this because I've already done it. I built those pathways of hard work of not quitting because I didn't, oh, how can I do this?
Starting point is 01:14:32 No one helped me start it. No one gave me the money. So yeah, I'm trying to think of that now because obviously my kids are getting older. Hey, time flies, bro. Just like they say, we're getting older, bro. It flies so fast. And I think I have changed some things too. Like with our kids, I try to tell them how smart they are, even though they are.
Starting point is 01:14:51 I just try to tell them they work hard. Like you did this because you worked really hard. And I just wanted to focus on that because I'm sure you've interviewing all the people that you do, all the people who come across. It doesn't matter how smart you are. They may have great ideas, but it's the people that constantly show up, even if they're not the smartest, even if it's not the best. Yes. As long as you keep going, like you said, in perfect action. just take action.
Starting point is 01:15:13 Those are the people that ultimately win. So I want my kids not to focus on how intelligent they are. I want them to focus on hard work. You made this happen because you kept showing up. You keep coming every day because, oh, your smart idea doesn't work. And now they're like, I'm not smart enough and they just quit. Yeah. Whereas if like I work hard, I'm going to make this happen.
Starting point is 01:15:32 Boom, they can keep going. I love that, man. I love that. Okay. So this is the level up. As you know, we're about self-help, about uplifting beginners, 95, first responders, what would you tell your audience right now that's going to listen to this interview? Because you have such a great compelling story, dude. I mean, people are probably
Starting point is 01:15:52 going to think you're lying. I'm just keeping honest, bro. You know how many times on socials are like, you fucking liar? Well, here's the best part is you can Google a lot of the things from police work. And there's a few stories that come up, some good, some bad. And then the other thing is everybody that's been on me with a call in crypto, because it's a blockchain, I have shown everyone on a call that I have actually done what I've said I've done. I mean, because it's right there. Yeah, dude. I mean, I'm pretty sure in the next coming up months, we're going to start doing a little bit more content creation and you're going to be showing all that jazz. It'll be good. You're going to force me. But what would be a couple words of encouragement,
Starting point is 01:16:31 man. So this is your audience right here. Just think about like you were on stage just like Saturday, last Saturday. And just give them a word of encouragement to level up, dude. would just say keep going. Every day, show up and just keep going. Do not quit. I have a saying, don't get captured. And there were plenty of times in life where I was not in a good place. I probably wasn't the best husband, wasn't the best father, but I just kept going. And every day, I should take that. It's not just keep going. It's literally no one else is responsible for the way that you feel and how things are going for you. And no matter how you feel, or what you're going through, it's nobody else's fault.
Starting point is 01:17:11 You just have to take accountability. And if you can push through that, you're going to succeed always. I love that, guys. And that's the level up, guys. Matt, where can they find you? Instagram, Facebook. What are the handles? Yeah, Instagram is at Precision Matt.
Starting point is 01:17:25 Precision Matt. Yeah. Okay. And then anything else that you want to leave them with as far as just like any information, they should study up on crypto before they come and talk to you? No. No? I think, yeah.
Starting point is 01:17:35 I think the best thing is just like in police work, If they have nothing, they don't have anything, then it's very easy because they're going to learn it the right way. Yeah. They're not going to do anything dumb right off the bat and lose money. Absolutely. So, guys, whether you're a first responder 9 to 5 or you're looking to invest into the blockchain crypto, but you don't know how like me, right? I'm going to go ahead and start investing with Matt here in December. I told him, dude, I'm so slam right now.
Starting point is 01:17:59 I got a kid on the way. I'm moving, selling a house and all that jobs. But it's the future. I mean, you can't stop it, guys. Okay. So if you guys are interested in going ahead and learning how to invest in crypto for the future for your family, for generational wealth, make sure to shoot them a DM on Instagram. With that being said, guys, we are currently top five right now.
Starting point is 01:18:18 What's the date today, Emilio? September 10th, guys, that's right. September 10th, we are top five in all categories, number one in business on Apple Podcasts because of you guys. Okay? We're going to try to hit 5 million downloads this month. With that being said, leave a five-star review on Spotify, Apple Podcast, and YouTube. This is Paul Alex, the level of podcast. We'll catch you on the next one.
Starting point is 01:18:39 Peace.

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